When you travel to another country, lets say Sweden, does your name change into "Hansson"? — ArmChairPhilosopher
Another travel example. When you travel to India and ask a Hindu if they believe in God, do you think they will refer to the Christian God? — Jackson
1. You didn't answer my question.
2. Do you? Or are they more likely to ask back "which one"? Referring to a specific god as "God" at least propagates confusion. I will use the proper names of the gods I'm talking about, Odin, Zeus or YHVH when I mean a specific god. I will use "god" and "it" when I refer to the diffuse concept of godhood. — ArmChairPhilosopher
I'm not sure but you seem to confuse the distinction of "inner state" versus "position" and "hard" and "soft". They are orthogonal. The former tells whether you are making a statement about yourself or the world, the later is talking about how something is (actuality) versus how something could (not) be (potential).
The stronger position would of course be the "hard" variant (we don't know and we will never know).
I can't defend that position. In fact, I see my position being falsified one day. When the last-but-one theist dies or de-converts there is only one (valid) definition of god left and soft Agnosticism would be wrong.
I was envisioning both my X examples as inner states, but it seems as though you may mean it in a more in the sense of the second example, is that right? — Bob Ross
On a separate note, I am not entirely sure how unified definition would disprove Agnosticism, but I am interested to hear why you think that is the case. — Bob Ross
Insofar as "God" is undefined, this perennial question is incoherent.Possible answers to questions like "does God exist?" — Agent Smith
I'm having extreme difficulty to understand why do you consider is undefined?Insofar as "God" is undefined — 180 Proof
What is you argument for God being undefined? — SpaceDweller
https://www.gracenotes.info/documents/topics_doc/essence.pdfSometimes the term "Attributes of God" is used to refer to God's essence.
But you must be aiming at:God is the same as his essence
https://philosophydungeon.weebly.com/definitions-of-god.htmlThe "attributes", or the "essence", of God are His primary characteristics, so they cannot be completely communicated to man.
They can be described to a degree, but they cannot be fully defined.
I don't know how many denominations are there but these are all denominations of protestant church AFAIK, which is irrelevant for this discussion.There are 41,000+ denominations in Christianity alone. — ArmChairPhilosopher
I don't know how many denominations are there but these are all denominations of protestant church AFAIK, which is irrelevant for this discussion. — SpaceDweller
How so? Don't they believe in a god? What makes them unfit to partake in the debate? Which religions and/or denominations are competent to define godhood? — ArmChairPhilosopher
Just because somebody says "I'm Christian" doesn't mean they are automatically fit to answer your questions.Which religions and/or denominations are competent to define godhood? — ArmChairPhilosopher
Insofar as "God" is undefined, this perennial question is incoherent. — 180 Proof
You omitted another optionPossible answers to questions like "does God exist?"
1. Yes
2. No
3. Don't know
3a. Unknown because of limitations in methodology and information
3b. Unknowable i.e. neither is there a method nor will omniscience help in determining the truth. Interesting, oui? — Agent Smith
Isn't there at least agreement that God had the ability to create a life-permitting universe?I did the experiment on another forum to try to distil only the common properties imagined of a god from a handful of Christians and the result was an empty set. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Isn't there at least agreement that God had the ability to create a life-permitting universe? — Relativist
Isn't there at least agreement that God had the ability to create a life-permitting universe? — Relativist
I'd call it more of a fuzzy concept: having a vague set of vaguely defined properties. One (fairly popular) vague property is the ability to grant wishes.I agree that the notion of god is incoherent and I think that this is the idea's strength for a lot of believers. — Tom Storm
fuzzy concept — Relativist
Correct, it seems we are on one page now.
It wouldn't directly disprove Agnosticism but it would deprive me of my best Argument. The obvious existence of a myriad of contradicting descriptions of a god is evidence and proof that the believers don't know what they are talking about.
(I discard atheistic views because they are biased.)
I am not sure how contradicting descriptions of god proves that, on an individual level, that one doesn't know what god is. — Bob Ross
What do you mean by "atheistic views"? Do you discard all of them? Why? — Bob Ross
-Well what we do know about the god claim is that its an idealistic concept of an ultimate agent/entity. So the only actual nature(conceptual) we are aware of this claim is constantly excluded and ignored.The only thing I can defend is that god is currently not known. — ArmChairPhilosopher
-Well what we do know about the god claim is that its an idealistic concept of an ultimate agent/entity. — Nickolasgaspar
Every Philosophical inquiry starts(should start) by getting familiar with our epistemology, what we know and how we know it. Agnosticism doesn't do that. — Nickolasgaspar
Yes there have been, thousands of gods. Most of them are claims motivated by that same idealistic concept on an Ultimate agent. Others, like jesus, are attempts to unsuccessfully tie that concept on entities with a known existential status.( that is an indirect existential god claim more of an False equivalence).Do we? There have been a plethora of gods in the past (and some in the present) that are claimed to be real. We don't have to look farther than Christianity which claims god (or some aspect of it) has been real in the person of Christ. So far for idealistic concept. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Agnosticism does exactly that. It questions the epistemology of itself and that of the believers. I'm OK with either convincing evidence for a real god or a consistent framework of an idealistic god. I'd even allow for a construct, given there is consensus. But the believers can't even agree on the category. — ArmChairPhilosopher
- First of all I assume nothing about what god is. I can only address the claims about that concept. I only need to know what those who accept the concept think about.The fault in your logic is that you assume to know what god is. You don't. — ArmChairPhilosopher
Someone once defined knowledge as "justified, true, belief". Not the best definition but it will do for the argument.
The other important thing is that knowledge is transferable. You can argue about a fact and you can convince an open minded interlocutor as is done in science all the time.
Theology had thousands of years to come to a consensus. The fact that it didn't shows that what you think is knowledge isn't justified.
It is mostly a concession towards the theists. They might complain that atheists have a straw man vision of god. I don't require that theists convince atheists to acknowledge that they might have knowledge about god, just that they come up with a consensus among themselves. I think that is a fair criterion to falsify my position.
The "plurality" of a claim(ad populum) doesn't benefit the epistemic or philosophical value of it. — Nickolasgaspar
But I would presume that when you state "knowledge is transferable", it is implying (1) that you are arguing for that as an amended tenant of "justification" and (2) that it is transferable to quantitatively equivocal recipients in relation to the sender. — Bob Ross
obviously knowledge cannot be transferable from, hypothetically, the sole human in existence to a rock: if one human remained on the planet, then that person wouldn't know anything (if we are taking "knowledge needs to be transferable to be justified" literally) — Bob Ross
Moreover, it is possible that one human obtains a legitimate proof of S but, due the major disparity between themselves and every other human being on the planet, no one agrees with them. Would they not "know" it then? — Bob Ross
Not really, if it did it would be forced to adopt the default position set by the Null hypothesis. — Nickolasgaspar
First of all I assume nothing about what god is. — Nickolasgaspar
I can only address the claims about that concept. I only need to know what those who accept the concept think about. — Nickolasgaspar
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